The carbon atoms come from the Ribulose biphosphate and CO2 fixation. The oxygen also comes from CO2 fixation. The hydrogen comes from the oxidation of NADPH (which was produced in the light-dependent reaction)
Short answer: There are five elements that makeup DNA. Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Nitrogen (N), Oxygen (O), and Phosphorous (P). DNA is made of chemical building blocks called nucleotides. These building blocks are made of three parts: a phosphate group, a sugar group and one of four types of nitrogen bases. The phosphate group has hydrogen, oxygen, and of course phosphate. The sugar group has hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon. And the four types of nitrogen bases are: Thymine C5H6N2O2 Guanine C5H5N5O Adenine C5H5N5 Cytosine C4H5N3O
The building blocks of nucleic acids are nucleotides, which consist of a sugar molecule (ribose or deoxyribose), a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base (adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, or uracil). These nucleotides are linked together via phosphodiester bonds to form the backbone of DNA and RNA molecules. The sequence of nitrogenous bases along the nucleic acid strand encodes genetic information.
Fats and oils are composed of three elements: carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. These elements are found in the fatty acids that make up the structure of fats and oils.
The four elements that make up 96 percent of the human body are oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen. These elements are found in abundance in biological molecules such as water, proteins, carbohydrates, fats, and nucleic acids, which are essential for human life and function.
To generalise, the substances that we actually need to survive in the first place is oxygen and water. These consist of hydrogen atoms and oxygen. Carbon is also very important as most things are made from carbon (along with other elements).Also, elements such as berylium, boron and lithium are not necessary but they are in the first 6 elements.Technically, the answer is no (but some of the elements are very important as I have said above).
Nucleic acids consist of a phosphate group, a sugar group and a nitrogenous base. The phosphate contains phosphorus and oxygen, the sugar group has carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, and the base has carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen.
Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen ine the ratio of 1:2:1
hydrogen, carbon, oxygen
Adenosine tri-phosphate is composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and nitrogen atoms.
Baking soda, or sodium bicarbonate, does not contain phosphate. It is a compound made up of sodium, hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen, but not phosphorus.
Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
By atoms: hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon By mass: oxygen, carbon, hydrogen
Ammonium phosphate contains the elements nitrogen, phosphorus, hydrogen, and oxygen.
Sodium dihydrogen phosphate is an inorganic compound. It is made up of sodium, hydrogen, phosphorus, and oxygen atoms and does not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds typical of organic compounds.
Lipids: Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen - monomers are glycerol and fatty acids Proteins - Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen - monomers are amino acids Carbs - No Phosphate. Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen - H:O ratio is 2:1 - monomers are monosaccharides (may have a ring structure) Nucleic Acides - examples are dna and rna. Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen and Phosphate - monomers are nucleotides (sugar, phosphate, nitrogen base)
All living matter is made up of CHONPS (carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphate and sulfate)
Short answer: There are five elements that makeup DNA. Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Nitrogen (N), Oxygen (O), and Phosphorous (P). DNA is made of chemical building blocks called nucleotides. These building blocks are made of three parts: a phosphate group, a sugar group and one of four types of nitrogen bases. The phosphate group has hydrogen, oxygen, and of course phosphate. The sugar group has hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon. And the four types of nitrogen bases are: Thymine C5H6N2O2 Guanine C5H5N5O Adenine C5H5N5 Cytosine C4H5N3O